Word: junoã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...part of Women’s Week, the event, organized by Harvard Students for Choice co-directors Catherine P. Humphreville ’10 and Sean P. Mascali ’08, featured speakers who screened clips from various movies such as “Juno?? and “Saved” to investigate if pregnancy-centered narratives portray abortion as an unmentionable rather than a debate. “In none of these clips is the word abortion used,” says panelist Shauna L. Shames ’01, a graduate student in government...
...pleas, the lies of her affair, and even her daughter, Annie is possibly the most flawed character. But her pitfalls, while frustrating, evoke our sympathies. In the midst of the adults’ tumultuous drama, Arthur develops a new relationship with his classmate, Lila (Olivia Thirlby, “Juno??). As the older characters become entrenched in a complex web of deception and animosity, Arthur and Lila’s banter is mercifully humorous and lighthearted. Their manner of dealing with the world around them is genuine, beautiful, and adorable—and seems more mature than...
...part of Women’s Week, the event, organized by Harvard Students for Choice co-directors Catherine P. Humphreville ’10 and Sean P. Mascali ’08, featured speakers who screened clips from various movies such as “Juno?? and “Saved” to investigate if pregnancy-centered narratives portray abortion as an unmentionable rather than a debate. “In none of these clips is the word abortion used,” says panelist Shauna L. Shames ’01, a graduate student in government...
...hated it, they not only looked surprised but also disgusted. “You even liked ‘28 Weeks Later,’” my friend said to me with a shocked glare on his face.The weeks passed, the critics raved, and “Juno?? did well in the box office. Everyone loved it; it was like “Little Miss Sunshine” had grown up and made some bad decisions.The largest blow to my sense of the moviegoing public, though, came just recently, when the Academy Award nominees were announced.Among...
...although “Compass” is playing at theaters alongside “Hitman” (in which a super-violent video game gets its cinematic treatment) and “Juno?? (see an unmarried teenager become pregnant!), Catholic parents’ greatest fear this holiday season should be that their kids want a book for Christmas...